Interacting Large-Scale Magnetic Fields and Ionised Gas in the W50/SS433 System
J. S. Farnes, B. M. Gaensler, C. Purcell, X. H. Sun, M. Haverkorn, E., Lenc, S. P. O'Sullivan, T. Akahori

TL;DR
This study uses high-sensitivity radio and optical observations to analyze the magnetic structure and ionized gas in the W50/SS433 system, revealing complex magnetic fields, shock features, and their implications for the nebula's origin and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed full-Stokes radio imaging of W50 with wide-band data and discovers new Hα filaments, linking magnetic structures to the nebula's supernova remnant and jet interactions.
Findings
Magnetic structure consistent with a reanimated SNR shell
Detection of RM gradients indicating coupled jet and SNR evolution
Discovery of Hα filaments associated with the nebula's central region
Abstract
The W50/SS433 system is an unusual Galactic outflow-driven object of debatable origin. We have used the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) to observe a new 198 pointing mosaic, covering , and present the highest-sensitivity full-Stokes data of W50 to date using wide-field, wide-band imaging over a 2 GHz bandwidth centred at 2.1 GHz. We also present a complementary H mosaic created using the Isaac Newton Telescope Photometric H Survey of the Northern Galactic Plane (IPHAS). The magnetic structure of W50 is found to be consistent with the prevailing hypothesis that the nebula is a reanimated shell-like supernova remnant (SNR), that has been re-energised by the jets from SS433. We observe strong depolarization effects that correlate with diffuse H emission, likely due to spatially-varying Faraday rotation measure (RM) fluctuations of…
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